Government ready to amend Land Acquisition Act: Narendra Modi

Government ready to amend Land Acquisition Act: Narendra Modi
x
Highlights

Facing stiff resistance on the Land Acquisition Bill, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday announced that the government will not re-promulgate the Ordinance which expires on Monday and declared readiness to accept any suggestions to benefit the farmers in the pending bill on it.

Facing stiff resistance on the Land Acquisition Bill, Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday announced that the government will not re-promulgate the Ordinance which expires on Monday and declared readiness to accept any suggestions to benefit the farmers in the pending bill on it.


Apparently referring to the political opponents, he said lot of misapprehensions had been created over the Land bill and fear was instilled among the farmers, even though states had suggested amendments to the Act of 2013 for the benefit of villages and villagers.

"I have said it earlier also. The government has an open mind on the Land Acquisition Bill, about which there is a lot of controversy. I have said it again and again that I am ready to accept any suggestion for the benefit of farmers," Modi said in his monthly radio program 'Mann Ki Baat'.

"We had promulgated an Ordinance on Land Acquisition Bill which will expire tomorrow. I have decided that it should be allowed to expire. It means restoration of the situation that prevailed before my government took over," the Prime Minister said, while insisting that the voice of farmers mattered the most to him.


The government had issued the Ordinance thrice so far as the Land bill could not be passed in Parliament due to stiff resistance by most of the opposition parties as well as some ruling NDA allies.

Modi, during his 20-minute address, maintained that the suggestions for "improving" upon the Land Act of 2013 had come from states who believed that for the welfare of farmers, there should be canals to bring irrigation water, electric poles for electricity, roads, houses and poor villagers should get work and "we should free this law from the clutches of the bureaucracy".

However, after the government brought the land bill, "a lot of misapprehension was created and so much of fear was instilled among the farmers. The farmers should neither have doubts nor have any fear and I will not give any such opportunity to anybody. ... Now there is no cause for any doubt and if anybody tries to create fear, you should not be scared," he said.

Modi said the government had incorporated 13 aspects of village development in the Ordinance for the welfare of villages but the matter got complicated because of controversies.

Now, since the Ordinance is being allowed to expire, the government notified rules for these 13 aspects which will come into effect from today to address this "incomplete work".

"We are doing this so that the farmers do not stand to lose, including financially," the Prime Minister said. "I want to assure the farmers that for us, 'jai jawan, jai kisan' is not just a slogan but our 'mantra'. That is why I announced creation of a ministry for farmers' welfare during my Independence Day address," he said.

Government, in a bid to wriggle out of the contentious land ordinance, could use a clause to remove difficulty to bring 13 central acts under the ambit of land acquisition law without going in for a fresh executive order.

Sources earlier said the Rural Development Ministry approached the Attorney General to seek his views on whether the clause on removal of difficulties may be used to include the 13 acts, which were kept out of the ambit of the Land Acquisition Act 2013 when the law was passed during UPA rule. The AG is learnt to have given its opinion in which it has said that this was possible.
Show Full Article
Print Article
Next Story
More Stories
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENTS